Department of Animal Medicine, Production and Health, University of Padua, 35020, Legnaro, PD, Italy.
Laboratory of Microbial Ecology and Genomics, Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale delle Venezie, 35020, Legnaro, PD, Italy.
Sci Rep. 2022 Jun 2;12(1):9199. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-13270-6.
Obesity in dogs is an emerging issue that affects canine health and well-being. Its development is ascribed to several factors, including genetic predisposition and dietary management, and recent evidence suggests that intestinal microbiota may be involved as well. Previous works have shown obesity to be linked to significant changes in gut microbiota composition in humans and mice, but only limited information is available on the role played by canine gut microbiota. The aim of this exploratory study was to investigate whether composition of canine faecal microbiota may be influenced by overweight condition and breed. All the enrolled companion dogs were young adults, intact, healthy, and fed commercial extruded pet food; none had received antibiotics, probiotics or immunosuppressant drugs in the previous six months. Labrador Retriever (LR) and Border Collie (BC) were chosen as reference breeds and Body Condition Score (BCS) on a 9-point scale as reference method for evaluating body fat. The faecal microbial communities of 15 lean (BCS 4-5/9; 7 LRs and 8 BCs) and 14 overweight (BCS > 5/9; 8 LRs and 6 BCs) family dogs were analysed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Moreover, for each dog, the daily intake of energy (kcal/d) and dietary macronutrients (g/d) were calculated according to an accurate feeding history collection. Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes resulted the predominant phyla (51.5 ± 10.0% and 33.4 ± 8.5%, respectively) in all dogs. Bioinformatic and statistical analysis revealed that no bacterial taxon differed significantly based on body condition, except for genus Allisonella (p < 0.05); BC gut microbiota was richer (p < 0.05) in bacteria belonging to phyla Actinobacteria (family Coriobacteriaceae in particular) and Firmicutes (Allobaculum and Roseburia genera). No remarkable differences were recorded either for diversity indices (i.e., alpha diversity, p > 0.10) or for divergence within the sample set (i.e., beta diversity, p > 0.05). PERMANOVA tests performed on single factors demonstrated the tendency of dietary protein to influence the recruited dogs' microbiota beta-diversity at amplicon sequence variant level (p = 0.08). In conclusion, the faecal microbiota of dogs involved in this exploratory study showed no major variations based on body condition. However, our findings suggested that certain bacterial taxa previously acknowledged in obesity-related studies may be detected in dissimilar amounts depending on canine breed.
狗肥胖是一个新兴的问题,影响犬的健康和福利。它的发展归因于几个因素,包括遗传易感性和饮食管理,最近的证据表明,肠道微生物群也可能参与其中。以前的研究表明,肥胖与人类和小鼠肠道微生物群组成的显著变化有关,但关于犬肠道微生物群的作用,信息有限。本探索性研究的目的是调查超重状况和品种是否会影响犬粪便微生物群的组成。所有入组的伴侣犬均为年轻成年犬,完整、健康,喂食商业膨化宠物食品;在过去六个月中,它们均未接受抗生素、益生菌或免疫抑制剂治疗。选择拉布拉多猎犬(LR)和边境牧羊犬(BC)作为参考品种,9 分制的身体状况评分(BCS)作为评估体脂的参考方法。使用 16S rRNA 基因测序分析了 15 只瘦(BCS 4-5/9;7 只 LR 和 8 只 BC)和 14 只超重(BCS>5/9;8 只 LR 和 6 只 BC)家庭犬的粪便微生物群落。此外,根据准确的喂养史收集,为每只狗计算了每天的能量(kcal/d)和膳食宏量营养素(g/d)摄入量。厚壁菌门和拟杆菌门是所有犬的主要门(分别为 51.5±10.0%和 33.4±8.5%)。生物信息学和统计分析显示,除了属 Allisonella(p<0.05)外,没有细菌分类群因身体状况而有显著差异;BC 肠道微生物群中厚壁菌门(特别是放线菌科)和拟杆菌门(属 Allobaculum 和 Roseburia)的细菌更为丰富(p<0.05)。多样性指数(即 alpha 多样性,p>0.10)或样本集中的离散度(即 beta 多样性,p>0.05)也没有显著差异。对单一因素进行的 PERMANOVA 检验表明,膳食蛋白质有影响招募犬微生物群 beta 多样性的趋势,在扩增子序列变异水平(p=0.08)。总之,本探索性研究中涉及的犬粪便微生物群没有因身体状况而发生重大变化。然而,我们的研究结果表明,在肥胖相关研究中已确认的某些细菌分类群可能因犬种不同而检测到的数量不同。